The Best Competitive Local Multiplayer Games

For a couple of years, I ran multiplayer Kotaku Game Nights in bars and pubs around London and Brighton, UK. We'd play good music with actual DJs, set up a bunch of consoles, get the beers in, and welcome anywhere from 50-200 people, depending on the night. It was the ultimate testing ground for competitive multiplayer. Some games proved too complicated for people to pick up and play in a bar setting; others got boring after a few rounds. The games below are the ones with the best balance of accessibility, nuance and all-important fun for a social setting.

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

Platforms: Nintendo Switch

Players: 1-8

Good for: Literally everyone

The absolute daddy of competitive multiplayer games: I have yet to encounter a person of any age who does not enjoy Mario Kart, and the Switch version is the best ever, with the added bonus of portability and an improved Battle Mode. With all tracks and characters unlocked from the start, MK8 Deluxe is geared towards frictionless multiplayer. Take advantage.

Stikbold

Platforms: PC, PS4, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One

Players: 1-4

Good for: Playing with kids

Stikbold is easily summed up as "crazy dodgeball." The premise seems a little thin — throw balls at each other in themed arenas — but the madcap random events keep it unpredictable and funny. Once a player is eliminated, they can interfere from the sidelines, sending a shark under the beach sand to snap up remaining players or running naked across the playing field. It's got a neat two-player co-op story mode, too.

Sportsfriends

Platforms: PS3, PS4, PC

Players: 2-4

Good for: When you have lots of space

Sportsfriends is a compilation of gently bizarre takes on four different sports. The stars of the bunch are Super Pole Riders, a hilarious competitive version of pole vaulting with a big wibbly pole and a ball attached to a zipline, and Johann Sebastian Joust. Joust uses movement sensors in the controller to create a game where the first person to make a sudden move loses — imagine four players standing with controllers behind their backs, trying to fake each other out. BariBariBall is a more traditional platform/fighting/goal-scoring game that also brings the fun, but is less entertainingly absurd.

Starwhal

Platforms: PC, PS3, PS4, Xbox One, Wii U

Players: 2-4

Good for: Chaotic party multiplayer

You and your friends are narwhals in space, and you must pierce each other's hearts with your horns. The controls feel imprecise at first but offer just the right level of control for unscripted chaos. I used to work with someone who was so improbably good at this game, he must have been an actual space-narwhal in a previous life.

Nidhogg

Platforms: PC, Mac, PS4, PS Vita

Players: 2

Good for: One-on-one fun

Fencing pixel stick-men pursue each other through surreal landscapes. Nidhogg makes immediate sense as soon as you pick it up: kill your opponent, run away. After a few rounds, once players get a grip on rolling, sword-throwing and flying kicks, it becomes immensely tactical and tense. I've seen spur-of-the-moment Nidhogg tournaments draw actual crowds of spectators. The sequel goes with a claymation art style and adds different weapons to the mix, but the simplicity and style of the first is unbeatable in my opinion.

Rocket League

Platforms: PC, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Wii U, PS4

Players: 2-4

Good for: Team play

If Mario Kart is the daddy of all competitive multiplayer games, Rocket League is the hot new thing. Put this game in a room full of people, and there will never be a controller going spare. "Football with cars" makes instinctive sense, and the longer you play, the more unexpected nuance reveals itself to you. You can start an evening with four novices and end up with a couple of decent competitive teams. Rocket League's only weakness is that it's not as much fun if there's a big skill differential between players.

1-2-Switch

Platforms: Nintendo Switch

Players: 2, plus spectators

Good for: Fun with people who don't play many games

1-2-Switch is a greatly underrated compilation of strange mini-games for the Switch that comes into its own in a room with people of varying gaming experience. Most of the best mini-games are pointlessly locked away until you've played for a while, but once you've got the full selection to choose from and have spent 10 minutes doing competitive catwalk strutting, you'll see the light. Not worth full price, though — try to pick it up at a discount.

Gang Beasts

Platforms: PS4, PC, Mac

Players: 2-8

Good for: Laughing until you hurt

Jelly babies attempt to punch each other to death. Gang Beasts' physics are what make this brawler so funny and unpredictable. As the name suggests, players can also gang up on each other if one of them keeps winning, which keeps the playing field even. A total riot.

Towerfall: Ascension

Platforms: PS4, Xbox One, Switch, PC, Mac

Players: 1-4

Good for: Heart-in-mouth turnarounds

Towerfall: Ascension is a pixel-art battle platformer with bows and arrows. It's an exceptional competitive game, fast but not overwhelming. Matches can turn in a matter of seconds, it looks and sounds awesome, and it has slow-mo victory replays. It also has that elusive "one-more-go" factor in abundance.

Super Smash Bros 4

Platforms: Wii U (and 3DS, but it's not as good)

Players: 1-8

Good for: Your gamer pals

Smash Bros is not the only accessible-yet-complex platform brawler around any more — Brawlhalla is another, increasingly popular take on the theme — but it is the best one. The star factor of Nintendo's roster is an undeniable draw, and unless one of your party is a Smash master, switching up characters and stages usually keeps one player from dominating. It's not one for groups where not everyone plays a lot of games, though. I'm betting on a Switch re-release of this in the not-too-distant future.

Speedrunners

Platforms: PC, Mac, Xbox One, PS4

Players: 2-4

Good for: Lunch break-length fun

Four players race through a level with grapple hooks. As matches last longer, the screen gets smaller, upping the pressure. Speedrunners is beloved by ear-splitting juvenile YouTubers, but don't let that put you off. It will have you cursing both your friends and your own momentary lapses of platforming skill.

Lethal League

Platforms: Windows, Mac, Playstation 4, Xbox One

Players: 2-4

Good for: People who are very competitive

If baseball were a fighting game, it would be this. Fighters attack not each other, but a bouncing ball that gets faster and faster as it ricochets around the level. The slightest lapse in concentration will doom you. It's absurdly tense and has awesome music.

Crawl

Platforms: Windows, Mac, Xbox One, Playstation 4, Nintendo Switch

Players: 2-4

Good for: A wild post-pub tug-of-war

At the beginning of this dungeon-crawler, you fight your friends to death. The victor gets to delve further into the dungeon, whilst the losers control the monsters, traps and bosses trying to kill them. If you get the last hit on the hero player, you get to take over. Crawl is truly brilliant with four players, and never boring for a moment.

Comments

Excellent list, I have all these games and most of them on multiple platforms. Gang Beasts & Speedrunners have lead to some of my fondest & funniest memories with my friends in gaming. A game I would personally recommend that isn't here is Ultimate Chicken Horse.

Try "Stickfight" it's by the developers that made clustertruck and has that same wacky feel, it's fast paced rounds with physics fighting and guns. you will laugh every single round, guarantee.
Pro tip: The snake gun always backfires.

I can heartily recommend Knight Squad for a couch-competitive party brawler (all experience levels).
Really want to give VIDEOBALL a try if I ever get 3 mates around for a more sports oriented team based night of mayhem.
Sadly my days of local multiplayer parties have mostly passed by. I yearn for a renaissance of this in my life though. I bought Screencheat a while back because I felt a pang of nostalgia for GoldenEye.

Story time! I went to an all-girls’ school. My friends and I had that special bond of closeness that apparently comes with synced-up periods and measuring the length of each other’s winter leg hair.
This, obviously, led to a brief era of trying to catch one of the others unawares with the most impressive, most unexpected spank possible. We’re talking sneaking up behind each other in the hallway and laying one down that made the earth shake. If I couldn’t read your palm from the imprint, you weren’t doing a good enough job.